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Journal of Virology, January 2006, p. 360-371, Vol. 80, No. 1
0022-538X/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.80.1.360-371.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Microbiology and Immunology Department, Medical University of Ohio, Toledo, Ohio 43614,1 Chiron Corporation, Emeryville, California2
Received 29 March 2005/ Accepted 22 September 2005
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10% or less of those of SIN wt replicon-infected cells, and, in contrast to wt virus and replicons containing wt nsP2, all showed a phenotype of continuous minus-strand synthesis and of unstable, mature replication/transcription complexes (RC+) that are active in plus-strand synthesis. Minus-strand synthesis and incorporation of [3H]uridine into replicative intermediates differed among PI replicons, depending on the location of the mutation in nsP2. Minus-strand synthesis by PI cells appeared normal; it was dependent on continuous P123 and P1234 polyprotein synthesis and ceased when protein synthesis was inhibited. The failure by the PI replicons to shut off minus-strand synthesis was not due to some defect in the PI cells but rather was due to the loss of some function in the mutated nsP2. This was demonstrated by showing that superinfection of PI cells with wt SFV triggered the shutdown of minus-strand synthesis, which we believe is a host response to infection with alphaviruses. Together, the results indicate alphavirus nsP2 functions to engage the host response to infection and activate a switch from the early-to-late phase. The loss of this function leads to continuous viral minus-strand synthesis and the production of unstable RC+. |
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As illustrated in Fig. 1, the N-terminal domain of nsP2 expresses nucleoside triphosphatase (NTPase) and helicase activities (19, 26, 40), in addition to the RNA-dependent 5'-triphosphatase. The NTPase conserved motifs I (GSGKS) and II (DEAF) function in NTP binding and begin at residues 189 and 250, respectively. They and downstream conserved motifs III through VI are predicted to share homology with motifs in superfamily 1 helicases (26, 28). The C-terminal domain expresses a papain-like thiol protease that is responsible for processing P1234 and whose catalytic dyad comprises C481 and H558 (reviewed in reference 55). This region also functions in the internal initiation of 26S mRNA synthesis (55, 56) and in translocation to the nucleus (NTS) and nucleolus (NoTS) (27, 37).
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FIG. 1. Schematic of alphavirus nsP2. The N domain (amino acids 1 to 459) encodes an RNA 5'-triphosphatase, NTPase, and helicase; the C domain (amino acids 475 to 799/807) encodes a papain-like protease, functions in internal initiation of 26S mRNA synthesis and in translocation of nsP2 to the nucleus (NTS) and nucleolus (NoTS), and shares homology with 2'-0-methyltransferases (2'-O-MT). The ts mutants of SIN that map to nsP2 are indicated by downward arrows. The locations of the predicted amino acid substitutions conferring PI phenotype on two SIN mutants (S1, S2) and three SFV mutants (1B, 2A, 2C) are indicated.
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The second set of nsP2 substitutions, S2 and 2C, are in the C terminus of nsP2, near the C end of the protease domain. They are also near two residues (amino acids 700 and 736) in SIN nsP2 whose alteration led to both the protease activity and the synthesis of 26S mRNA becoming temperature sensitive. In addition to these temperature-sensitive phenotypes, nsP2 mutants with alterations at residues 700, 517, and 522 were able to reactivate minus-strand synthesis at 40°C after it had ceased at 30°C (42, 45). The residue 726 mutant, S2, has also been obtained from persistent infection (PI) cultures independently by others (7, 16, 18) and as variants encoding different amino acids at this position (1). The C domain also contains sequences conserved in 2'-O-methyltransferases (2'-O-MT) (9), although the alphavirus sequence that begins at nsP2 residue 603 is predicted to be enzymatically inactive (A. Gorbalenya, personal communication). The third set of nsP2 changes, 1B, is a lesion in the interdomain region of nsP2 that lies adjacent to a sequence implicated in nucleolar (NoTS) localization (Fig. 1) (41).
We undertook a comparative analysis of five nsP2 mutant replicons to further probe the mechanism(s) responsible for their persistence in BHK21 cells. Persistence implied the survival of the host cell and the continual or continuous viral RNA synthesis to make replicon genomes and the subgenomic mRNA encoding the required drug resistance. Therefore, we considered two alternative mechanisms. In the first model, the presence of mutant nsP2 proteins allows a new wave of minus-strand synthesis to occur with each cell passage or cell division, and then its cessation occurs normally several hours later. In the second model, viral minus-strand synthesis is continuous, i.e., it fails to cease. An earlier study (39) verified the presence and steady-state levels of minus and plus strands but did not monitor rates of minus-strand synthesis over time and therefore could not distinguish between the two possibilities. In vertebrate cells such as BHK21, alphavirus infection is lytic, viral minus-strand synthesis stops selectively 4 to 6 h after infection (43), and, once made, minus strands exist as long-lived templates engaged in plus-strand synthesis by a stable replication/transcription complex (RC+). An exception to this pattern was found with cells deficient in the latent host cell endonuclease RNase L. In alphavirus-infected Aedes cells that naturally lack RNase L and in infected mouse embryo fibroblasts (MEF) deficient in RNase L (knockout MEF), viral minus-strand synthesis remained continuous, i.e., it did not shut off, and infected cells did not switch to the late phase (48). Moreover, in cells lacking RNase L, mature viral RC+-making genomes and 26S mRNA were not stable and lost activity with time after inhibiting protein synthesis (48).
The studies reported here found that BHK21 cultures persistently infected with replicons (PI cultures) producing mutated nsP2 exhibited a phenotype similar to that of RNase L-deficient cells infected with wt SIN or wt SFV: minus-strand synthesis was continuous, and unstable viral replication complexes were produced. Finding the same phenotype suggested that the two proteins function in similar events. For example, wt nsP2 proteins could be involved in inducing host responses that act through RNase L, either directly or indirectly, to block the formation of replication/transcription complexes. This would mean that, normally, in wt alphavirus-infected cells, functions associated with wt nsP2 proteins modulate the host response(s) to infection, which in turn leads to the loss of minus-strand synthesis but the production of stable RC+.
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The wild-type viruses, the heat-resistant (HR) strain of SIN, and wt SFV were grown as described previously (5, 46). SIN nsP4 mutant R183S virus was described previously (11). Virus stocks used in this study were obtained by plaque purification and propagated at a low multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 0.1 to 1 PFU/cell.
The alphavirus replicon variants capable of establishing PI have been described previously (39). All the replicons contained a neomycin phosphotransferase under the control of the subgenomic promoter. The cloned SIN and SFV variants were used to derive drug-resistant cell lines (PI cultures) as described previously (39) and grown in G418-containing growth medium. The wt replicon genomes that were packaged into viral particles following their expression in cell lines producing the SIN structural proteins were also assayed (16, 17). We used the wt SIN replicon/GFP (no. 510; titer of 3.8 x 109 infectious units/ml), provided as packaged replicon stock, which was a generous gift of Ilya Frolov (University of Texas Medical Center, Galveston, TX).
Infection and RNA labeling. BHK21 cells were infected with SIN or SFV at an MOI of 100 PFU/cell. Cells in 35- or 60-mm-diameter petri dishes were labeled with 1 ml of 5'-[3H]uridine (50 µCi/ml unless otherwise indicated) in DMEM containing 20 µg/ml of actinomycin D, 5% fetal bovine serum, and 20 mM HEPES (pH 7.4). At the end of the labeling period, cells were washed twice with ice-cold phosphate-buffered saline and lysed with 5% lithium dodecyl sulfate in LET buffer (0.1 M LiCl, 1 mM EDTA, and 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4) containing proteinase K, and the DNA was sheared with a 27-gauge needle as described previously (6). [3H]uridine incorporation into viral RNA was determined by precipitation with 10% trichloroacetic acid. The precipitates from triplicate samples of 5 x 104 cells were collected on glass fiber filters, heat dried, and immersed in toluene containing OmniFluor (Perkin Elmer, Boston, MA). The radioactivity was determined with a Beckman LS 3801 (Fremont, CA). The relative amount of genome RNA to subgenomic 26S mRNA synthesis was determined after electrophoresis of infected-cell extracts on agarose gels (6).
Isolation of SIN replicative-form (RF) RNA and kinetics of minus-strand RNA synthesis. Minus-strand RNA synthesis was determined as described by Dé et al. (6). The cells were pulse-labeled for 1 h or continuously labeled for 1 to 7 or 8 h postinfection (p.i.) with [3H]uridine in the presence of 20 µg/ml of actinomycin D to suppress host cell DNA-dependent RNA synthesis. The RNA was obtained by low-pH phenol and chloroform/isoamyl alcohol (95:5) extraction and ethanol precipitation. RF RNA was obtained by digestion with RNase A (0.1 µg/ml) and chromatography on CF-11 cellulose (Whatman, Clifton, NJ) as described previously (15). Minus-strand RNA synthesis was measured by RNase-protection assay, which determines the amount of heat-denatured [3H]uridine-labeled RF RNA that was protected from RNase digestion (with 5 µg of RNase A/ml) by hybridization to an excess (about 100-fold) of unlabeled 49S plus-strand RNA (42). In this assay, the results are expressed as the percentage of the [3H]uridine incorporated into the minus-strand component of purified, RNase-resistant RNA cores of viral replicative structures, i.e., RF RNA. If 40 to 50% of the total incorporation in the RF RNA is found in minus strands, it means that 80 to 100% of minus strands that were used as templates during the pulse period had been made during the pulse period. This can be found when minus-strand synthesis is measured early in an infection, when viral RNA synthesis increases exponentially (47). A value of 5% means that only 10% of the templates were newly made during the pulse period and the remaining 90% of the templates were made earlier, and therefore unlabeled; together they were the templates for the 95% of the incorporated [3H]uridine that was recovered in nascent plus strands.
Electrophoretic analysis of replicon and viral RNA. For analysis of overall viral RNA, the proteinase K-treated extracts of 5 x 104 cells that had been labeled with [3H]uridine were subjected to gel electrophoresis on 0.8% agarose gels in TBE (89 mM Tris base, 89 mM boric acid, 2 mM EDTA) buffer containing 0.2% sodium dodecyl sulfate. The gels were dehydrated with methanol and treated in 1% 2,5-diphenyloxazole (PPO) in methanol, followed by hydration to precipitate the PPO in the gel, which was then dried under vacuum and exposed to film at 80°C. Gel slices corresponding to the viral species were excised and counted by liquid scintillation spectroscopy as described above.
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50% of total RF core radioactivity is in plus strands and
50% is in minus strands, reflecting the relative proportion of minus and plus strands in RF. A value of 50% of the RF cpm is the maximum possible as labeled minus strands, because RIs also are engaged continuously in plus-strand synthesis. With alphaviruses, minus-strand synthesis fails to continue after the early period due to the activation of some unknown process that blocks minus-strand synthesis (5, 43, 48, 55). The cessation process leads to a steady decline in the amount of labeled minus strands in the RF cores. For example, finding 30% of the total radiolabel in RF cores was in minus strands is relative to a maximum value of 50% when all minus strands are labeled, and thus indicates that 60% of templates active in plus-strand synthesis were made during the labeling period and 40% had been made before the labeling started. This analysis is illustrated in Fig. 2, which presents theoretical structures at early and late times. Minus-strand synthesis stops by 6 h p.i. at 37°C in SIN virus-infected cells (Fig. 3C); after this time, [3H]uridine is incorporated at constant, maximal rates into the RIs because the number of minus-strand templates does not increase and only plus strands are labeled with [3H]uridine.
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FIG. 2. During alphavirus (SIN or SFV) infection, minus-strand templates are synthesized until 4 to 5 h p.i. in most vertebrate cells, and then their synthesis stops and only plus strands are made. If [3H]uridine is added at the beginning of infection (continuous label), as shown in the left panel, all viral minus and plus strands will be labeled, and 50% of the cpm in RF RNA is found in minus strands. If the [3H]uridine is added early but after 40% of the minus strands have been made, only newly synthesized minus strands are labeled. In this example (middle panel), 30% of the cpm in RF RNA will be found in minus strands. If [3H]uridine is added after 5 h p.i., when there is no longer any minus-strand synthesis occurring, only the plus strands of the RF RNA are labeled, and <1% of the cpm in RF RNA is found in minus strands. Thus, by determining the percentage of the [3H]uridine-labeled RF RNA that is in minus strands, the relative rate of minus-strand synthesis compared to plus-strand synthesis can be determined. A value of 50% means that 100% of the minus-strand templates were made during the pulse-label, and a value of 30% means that 60% of the minus-strand templates were synthesized during the pulse-label and 40% were made earlier.
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FIG. 3. RNA synthesis by five nsP2 mutant replicons compared to wt SIN virus and wt replicons. BHK21 cells were infected at 37°C either with wt SIN ( ) virus at an MOI of 100 or with wt SIN replicons ( ) at an MOI of 35 at time 0 (panels A, C, and E). The PI cells (panels B, D, and F) were SFV 1B ( ), SIN S1 (), SIN S2 ( ), SFV 2A ( ), and SFV 2C ( 5-fold higher than that of 2A and 10- to 20-fold higher than that of S2 and 2C.
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We next characterized the five PI-replicon cells. The first set of studies used successive 1-h pulse labels to monitor relative transcription rates (Fig. 3). In contrast to wt-infected cells, PI cells showed only a constant, linear rate over time and produced 1 to 5% as much viral RNA each hour as wt SIN, varying little among each other, or by approximately threefold at most (Fig. 3B). All five replicons incorporated [3H]uridine into RIs at essentially constant rates during 1-h pulse-labeling (Fig. 3D), with replicons 1B and S1 showing
5-fold higher amounts of incorporation per hour than 2A and
10- to 20-fold higher amounts per hour than S2 and 2C. The results meant that different replicons formed different numbers of RIs. Because the five PI replicons did not differ significantly in overall rates of plus-strand synthesis, finding SIN S2 and SFV 2C had significantly fewer templates (Fig. 3D) suggested that RC+ containing the S2 and 2C mutated forms of nsP2 were more efficient; i.e., fewer minus-strand templates appeared to be required to produce the same number of plus strands. Another difference observed with the PI replicons was their ability to continuously make minus strands over the 8-h period (Fig. 3F). As expected from the low levels of RIs, the five PI cells made small amounts of minus strands. Individual PI replicons differed somewhat in how much minus-strand RNA was made per hour (Fig. 2F), and PI replicons with the highest rates of minus-strand synthesis (SVF1B and SIN S1) also had the most RIs, and those with the lowest rates of minus-strand synthesis (SFV 2A and 2C and SIN S2) had the least RIs. Thus, unlike wt SIN, wt SFV, or wt SIN replicons, minus-strand synthesis with the PI replicons was continuous and failed to shut off, and new RI and/or native RF was formed continuously.
This was novel and intriguing because it meant either that not all minus strands were being utilized as templates or that the normally long-lived RC+ were short-lived in PI cells. To address this issue we determined the fraction of the total RIs that were made each hour by comparing the percentage of the [3H]uridine in RF cores that was in minus strands each hour following 1-h pulse-labels and also over time during a 7-h continuous-labeling period. This allowed us to follow the fate of minus strands over time and observe whether they accumulated in RIs or were rapidly turned over and degraded. Results from pulse-labeling (Fig. 4A) indicated the level of minus-strand synthesis by the PI cells was considerable, as it represented 15% to 30% of the total radiolabeled RF core RNA each hour. This meant an additional 30% to 60% new RIs were being formed each hour by PI cultures that nevertheless incorporated [3H]uridine into RIs at a constant level (Fig. 3D). With continuous labeling, the total amount of radiolabeled RIs (RF cores) increased with time for all five PI cell cultures; wt SIN infected cells showed zero, or no more than
15%, increases after 4 h p.i. (data not shown). For S1, the total RF core cpm increased 3.4-fold between 1 and 7 h of labeling, and
2-fold between 2 and 7 h (Table 1). An increase of 3.4-fold would mean only one-third of RIs made over the 7-h period (2,802 RF cpm; Table 1) were active the last hour (1,005 cpm were in labeled RF in a pulse given 7 to 8 h p.i.; Table 1). Second, in addition to an increase in the amount of radiolabeled RIs, the fraction of the RI population that was made during the labeling period also increased with time of labeling (Fig. 4B). Because 90 to 94% of the radiolabeled RIs isolated after 6 or 7 h of [3H]uridine had radiolabeled minus strands, most of the original RI population that would have had unlabeled minus-strand templates had been replaced. The five PI replicons differed slightly in rates of RI turnover/replacement: 1B had 90% or more new RIs within a 3-h period; S1 and 2A required about 5 h, and 2C and S2 required 6 h of labeling (Fig. 4B). This was in contrast to wt SIN, where during continuous labeling
50% of the radiolabeled RF core RNA was in minus strands at any time after adding the label (Fig. 4B and C), which is consistent with the minus strands being made early and functioning as templates in stable RC+ throughout infection. The data presented in Table 1 and Fig. 4C and D further illustrate the concept that there is a population of inactive RIs accumulating in S1 replicon PI cells. Because, on average, 24% of the total radiolabeled RF core RNA was in minus strands during 1-h pulse-labels,
50% of the RIs engaged in plus-strand synthesis were newly made that hour and
50% were made earlier. In contrast, after a continuous 7-h labeling period, the amount of [3H]uridine in RF cores increased sixfold, consistent with their accumulation over time. The original S1 RI population with unlabeled templates now represented only
6% of the recovered RI population (Table 1). The apparent loss of the original RI population could reflect their dilution by newly made ones (expansion of the RI pool) as well as their degradation. Synthesis of 50% new RIs per hour would lead to an expected dilution of 4.5-fold over the 7-h period, and cannot alone explain the observed low value of
6%. Thus, it is possible some older, silenced RIs also underwent degradation. Such results were unexpected. This meant the normal stabilization of RC+ seen in wt SIN or wt SFV was not occurring in PI cells with replicons expressing mutant nsP2 proteins.
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FIG. 4. Synthesis and accumulation of minus strands by PI replicons relative to wt SIN. The incorporation of [3H]uridine into viral minus strands from the samples shown in Fig. 2 is expressed as a percentage of the total incorporation in RF core RNA that was in minus strands. The cells were labeled with 200 µCi/ml of [3H]uridine in the presence of 20 µg/ml of actinomycin D for 1-h pulse periods (panel A) or continuously from 1 to 7 or 8 h p.i. (panel B). Panel C depicts the incorporation of [3H]uridine into minus-strand RNA by SIN S1 PI cells during pulse-labeling () or continuous labeling ( ) and by wt SIN in pulse-labeling ( ) and continuous labeling ( ). The percentage of the total incorporation in RF core RNA that was in minus strands at each time is also given. Panel D shows the relative number of RIs in the pulse-labeled, active fraction versus the continuously labeled, total RI fraction. The data for this panel are from Table 1. The total (continuously labeled) RIs minus the active RIs (the sum of those with labeled and unlabeled templates) each hour yields the relative number of inactive (silenced) RIs accumulating in PI cells. (), S1 total RIs, continuously labeled; ( ), S1 silenced RIs (total RI cpm minus the cpm in pulse-labeled [active] RIs); ( ), S1 pulse-labeled RIs with radiolabeled minus strands; ( ), S1 pulse-labeled RIs with unlabeled minus strands.
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TABLE 1. Kinetics of labeling of RIs and minus strands by the S1 PI replicon
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FIG. 5. Effects of inhibiting protein synthesis on PI replicon and wt SIN plus- and minus-strand synthesis. Each of the replicon PI cells and SIN-infected cells was treated with 100 µg/ml of CH or untreated and pulse-labeled for 1-h periods with 200 µCi/ml of [3H]uridine/ml in the presence or absence of CH. Total viral RNA synthesis (panels A to E) and minus-strand synthesis (panels F to J) were determined as described for Fig. 2 and 3. Cultures treated with 100 µg of CH/ml in complete DMEM medium were incubated continuously in CH-containing medium beginning at the time(s) indicated by the arrows, and their incorporation is shown by the dashed lines. The hours indicate the start of the wt SIN infection. A and F, wt SIN; B and G, SIN S1; C and H, SFV 1B; D and E, SFV 2A; E and J, SFV 2C.
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7 h p.i., wt SFV minus strands were no longer made (Fig. 6B). Figure 6C shows the specificity of our RNase protection assay and its ability to distinguish SIN minus strands from SFV minus strands in cells producing both kinds of templates. Even with this specificity, we were not able to separately monitor the fate of PI replicon minus-strand synthesis in the superinfected cultures, due to the overwhelming excess of superinfecting RNA synthesis (50-fold over PI levels). We cannot therefore conclude definitively that the PI replicon minus-strand synthesis was also inhibited in the superinfected cultures. However, the results strongly suggest this occurred, because the levels of overall SFV minus-strand synthesis were below the values seen in the SFV replicon 2A, 1B, and 2C PI cultures that were not superinfected (i.e., average values of 36% [1B], 23% [2A], and 18% [2C]) (data not shown). Therefore, we interpret the results to mean that PI cells were capable of responding fully to alphavirus infection in the presence of wt nsP2 proteins and that BHK21 cells were not selected by the replicons to be those incapable of mounting an antiviral response to alphaviruses.
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FIG. 6. Superinfection with wt SFV of PI cells activates cessation of minus-strand synthesis. One set of cultures of each of the PI cells was infected with wt SFV (solid symbols) and one set was left uninfected (open symbols). To aid detection of the low levels of S2 RNA, the S1 and S2 cells were pulse-labeled for 1-h periods with 200 µCi/ml of [3H]uridine/ml and are plotted using the right axis, while the infected BHK21 cells and the 1B, 2A, and 2C cultures were labeled with 50 µCi/ml of [3H]uridine/ml and are plotted using the left axis. The PI cells are SIN S1 (), SIN S2 ( ), SFV 1B ( ), SFV 2A ( ), and SFV 2C ( ). Hours shown are postinfection. (A) Total incorporation (plus-strand synthesis); (B) Minus-strand synthesis (% of the [3H]uridine in RF RNA that was in minus strands); (C) Annealing controls. RF RNA from either wt SIN or wt SFV infected cells that had been labeled continuously with [3H]uridine from 2 to 6 h p.i. was heat-denatured and allowed to anneal in the presence of an excess of unlabeled SIN or SFV genomes (plus strands) from purified virions.
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FIG. 7. SIN R183S does not allow superinfection with wt SIN. BHK21 cells were infected at 30°C with SIN R183S (arginine-to-serine substitution in amino acid 183 of nsP4) () and shifted to 40°C at 1 h p.i. At 4 h p.i., one set of SIN R183S-infected cells was superinfected at 40°C with wt SIN HR ( ), and a set of uninfected BHK21 cells were infected with wt SIN HR ( ) at 40°C. The infected cells were pulse-labeled at 40°C for 1-h periods with 50 µCi/ml of [3H]uridine. Total incorporation (plus-strand synthesis) was determined as described in Materials and Methods.
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FIG. 8. Analysis by gel electrophoresis of PI replicon RNA synthesis after superinfection with wt SFV. Cultures of SIN S1 (A) and SIN S2 (B) replicon PI cells were or were not superinfected with wt SFV beginning at 0 h. Duplicate sets of superinfected cultures were treated with 100 µg/ml of CH, beginning at either 3 h or 6 h after superinfection. A sample of each extract solubilized with 5% lithium dodecyl sulfate-200 µg/ml proteinase K was analyzed directly by electrophoresis on 0.8% agarose-TBE gels. The gels were processed for fluorography and scans of the resulting fluorographs are shown. Scanning was with the Kodak electrophoresis documentation and analysis system 290 for Macintosh computers (Kodak Corp., Rochester, NY).
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4 h p.i. Also, the activity of RC+ making replicon genomes and subgenomic mRNA was unstable, unlike those assembled in wt SIN or SFV infected cells. Intriguingly, the same two features were observed for wt virus-infected cells lacking RNase L, a host-encoded, latent endonuclease (48). This commonality potentially implicates both viral functions (nsP2) and host functions (RNase L) in events leading to the cessation of minus-strand synthesis and the stabilization of RC+; whether or not the two factors are directly linked is not known. The different behavior of PI replicons compared to the wt was not due merely to their low levels of viral RNA synthesis, since certain SIN mutants replicating at the same low levels efficiently caused minus-strand synthesis to cease and caused the formation of stable RC+. Also, the ability of SIN to block host translation does not depend on the level of viral RNA synthesis (12, 18). It was not due to a lack of synthesis of structural proteins, since wt SIN replicons exhibited a wt pattern of cessation (Fig. 3). Cessation of minus-strand synthesis also was not influenced by higher amounts of the viral nsPs because, for instance, SFV ts1-infected cells shut off minus-strand synthesis at the same time as the wt virus (49), even though they expressed high (twice as much as wt) levels of nsPs and reduced amounts of structural proteins. Also, it was earlier shown that adding CH to wt-infected cells very early or very late does not change the stability of RC+ nor does temperature shift of other RNA-negative ts mutants of SIN or SFV (reviewed in reference 43). In addition to supporting wt nsP2 functions in cessation, such results and the findings in this study argue against models for cessation (24, 55) that invoke altered processing of nsP polyproteins by the nsP2 protease, and instead implicate a host response to infection, with nsP2 functions determining the nature of the response and RNase L playing an essential role, at least in MEF cells (48).
One factor affecting persistence would be host translation, which was inhibited in BHK21 cells either infected with SIN virus or with wt SIN replicons that lack structural genes but are cytopathic for cells (17). The replication of SIN and SFV replicons requires the production of nsPs, which is only possible if the PI cultures remain permissive for replicon RNA synthesis, presumably by retaining host translation and synthesis of host factors so the cells do not die. We found that minus-strand synthesis in replicon PI cells, like wt-infected cells, required production of new ns polyproteins; the addition of CH caused PI minus-strand synthesis to stop (Fig. 5). Therefore, continuous minus-strand synthesis in replicon PI cultures cannot be explained by a long-lived or stable minus-strand activity that might occur due to altered or failed processing of P123 and P23 (cis-active effects) or to reactivation of minus-strand synthesis by mature RC+ via template switching (42, 43, 45). Presumably, persistent infection, or the maintenance of replicons, requires continuous minus-strand synthesis because without it, the host response that targets and inactivates previously formed viral templates (RC+) would cure the infection over time, i.e., the two phenotypes are compensatory. Nor was the PI phenotype due to the selection of cell mutants, because PI cells responded to wt viral infection the same as parental BHK21 cells. Superinfection with wt virus induced PI cells to enter the late phase, e.g., activate the cessation of minus-strand synthesis, after a lag or early period that was more than 3 h but less than 6 h in length (Fig. 8). Thus, replicon PI cells switched from the "permissive" state for minus-strand synthesis to the nonpermissive state following wt virus infection. After the induction of the nonpermissive state, RC+ turnover also was prevented. The major difference, although possibly not the only difference, from wt virus or wt replicon-infected cells was that all replicon PI cells expressed mutant forms of the viral nsP2 protein (1, 7, 16, 18, 39). This suggests a loss of wt functions by mutant nsP2 proteins led to a failure of the host to respond fully to infection and to shut off minus-strand synthesis.
Why nsP2 functions? Only nsP2, among the four nsPs, is found as several distinct populations in infected cells. About 50% of the nsP2 is transported to the nucleus and nucleolus, even though a viable nucleus is only required for alphavirus replication in insect cells (10). About 25% of the total nsP2 are components of RC+ that are present in membrane-associated, spherulelike structures that are in the P15 fraction. The stable activity of RC+ in the absence of continued nsP translation argues its nsP2 proteins are stable (permanent) components normally. The remaining 25% of nsP2 is recovered in the S15 fraction, where it was found to reversibly associate with the P15 fraction for 26S mRNA synthesis (56). The different cell distributions support the notion of different functional roles for nsP2, and loss of one or more of these appear to be required for the ability to exist in a PI cell (16, 18).
Certain of the nsP2 PI mutants had subtle effects on RNA synthesis that are likely expressed by the nsP2 population associated with replication complexes (RC+ or RC). In the replicon PI cells, minus-strand synthesis and its accumulation as RIs varied somewhat, in the order 1B > S1 and 2A (N-domain mutants) > S2 and 2C (C-domain mutants), as summarized in Table 2. Although the C-domain mutants S2 and 2C made the least minus strands, their synthesis of plus strands relative to numbers of minus-strand templates was the highest, and thus, these nsP2 substitutions may have enhanced transcription efficiency in some way. One possibility is enhanced initiation of subgenomic mRNA synthesis, because all known ts 26S mRNA-defective SIN and SFV mutants have lesions in the C domain of nsP2 (43, 55). The C domain encodes an enzymatically inactive, 2'-O-MT-related sequence (A. Gorbalenya, personal communication) compared to plus-strand RNA flaviviruses and coronaviruses that encode an active 2'-O-MT (14, 25, 61). In alphaviruses, such a domain may function to compete with cellular homologs or have separate RNA-associated activities mediated by a substrate-binding domain that is conserved in cellular and viral homologs also and that may target rRNA or viral RNA species (A. Gorbalenya, personal communication). Consistent with the absence of active 2'-O-MT, the SIN genome and 26S mRNA possess only type 0 cap structures (8). Finding a similar phenotype for nsP2 mutants that map outside of this domain suggests the 2'-O-MT-associated function is not responsible (solely) for the PI phenotype or that substitution at distant sites affects this C-domain sequence once it is folded.
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TABLE 2. RNA synthesis properties of the nsP2 PI mutants
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A working model for alphavirus replication that incorporates our findings is shown in Fig. 9. Early in wt virus infection (Fig. 9A), nascent P123 and P1234 are synthesized, processed, and assembled into RC that copy the genome and produce a minus-strand template. The ns proteins remain associated with the new minus strand and undergo further cleavage to form replicases active in 49S plus-strand synthesis while retaining the activity for minus-strand synthesis (nsP1 + P23 + nsP4). Final cleavage of its P23 to nsP2 and nsP3 inactivates minus-strand synthesis and permits the reassembly into RC+ that efficiently synthesizes both genomes and subgenomic mRNA using the minus-strand template. The mature RC+ are long-lived, or stable, and associated with membranes (P15) in wt virus-infected cells and produce viral RNA in the absence of new protein synthesis. Also, nsP2 accumulates in the cytosol (S15) and in the nucleus, and associates with ribosomes (55), which gives it the potential to influence translation and the host response to infection. At about 4 h p.i., depending on the cell type, the host response switches the cell environment to the late phase and inhibits host but not viral translation (49). During the late phase, nascent nsPs continue to be made but do not assemble into an active RC, and minus-strand templates are not made (late phase block in Fig. 9A). Cells lacking RNase L (48) or PI cells expressing mutant nsP2 proteins (Fig. 9B) did not switch from the early to the late phase, allowed new P123 and P1234 to assemble continuously into RC synthesized minus-strand templates and utilized them in newly formed RC+ solely for plus-strand synthesis. Recently, we found that, at the time cessation is seen, the host's type 1 interferon feedback loop is in an early, secondary response phase and a specific subset of host mRNA appears to be targeted for decay in normal MEF but not in RNase L-deficient MEF (D. Sawicki, S. Sawicki, D. Leaman, unpublished results). One possible but not exclusive model (Fig. 9C) to put together the nsP2 PI cells and RNase L deficient MEF results with these preliminary findings proposes that the host response to infection causes the early loss of a subset of host mRNAs that produce factor(s) required to activate the viral nsPs to form RC and thus blocks all further minus-strand synthesis (cessation). Loss of either nsP2 functions or RNase L prevents these events. However, loss of either RNase L or nsP2 functions allowed host responses now to target mature RC+ for turnover. Recovery of RF core-like molecules from PI cells predicts such targeting prevented further initiation on these templates because the last nascent plus strand remained associated with its template (Fig. 9B). We propose wt nsP2 acts via an RNase L-dependent pathway to block specific parts of the host response that would otherwise inactivate RC+ or target it for destruction (Fig. 9C). Future studies will attempt to probe the validity of such a model.
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FIG. 9. Model for alphavirus replication/transcription. Translation of the incoming genome produces ns polyproteins P123 and P1234, whose regulated processing by the nsP2 protease produces polymerases active first in minus-strand synthesis (called RC or RCINITIAL), then in both genome plus- and minus-strand synthesis. Cleavage of P23 at the 2/3 site eliminates minus-strand activity and fully activates the plus-strand activity of the replication/transcription complex (RC+ or RCSTABLE), especially that of 26S mRNA synthesis. In cells lacking the host latent endonuclease RNase L and in the nsP2 mutant replicon expressing BHK cells, RC+ is transcriptionally short-lived and its templates can be recovered as RF core RNA ("accumulation of double-stranded RNA [dsRNA]"). Our working model is that wt virus infection leads to host responses that act via RNase L dependent pathways to inhibit host translation, thereby limiting essential host factors for the formation of RC. The RC+ that form under these conditions are stable and turn over only slowly if at all. In the absence of wt nsP2 functions, host responses target and inactivate RC+ but fail to induce a late phase of virus replication (e.g., fail to inhibit host translation), which permits RC, in addition to RC+, to be continually formed. Thus, nsP2 mutant replicon PI cells allow for continuous minus-strand synthesis.
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Support for these studies was from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (AI15123) to D.L.S.
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